A lucky shot of a Townsend's Big-eared Bat, Corynorhinus townsendii, in a Tehachapi cave
The above was taken by a 6MP Sony s600 homebrew cam trap. And while they aren't slow for camera traps, their 1.5 second start-up & re-shoot times aren't dSLR camera fast, so getting bats on the wing requires lucky timing, and good camera positioning.
So far my experiments have found that pointing the camera along the bat's flight corridor, much as you would point it down a road at a 30-ish degree angle, seems to give the best results. As you'd expect, like mammals walking a road, it increases the time bats are within the scene, and thus ups your chances of getting shots as they come and go.
But first you have to figure out the corridor they use. And then you have to hope that, like this nice Townsend's, they smile for the camera every once in a while.
Oh - you may notice a bright orange parasite is also 'on the wing' in the above photo. As I learned from my invert-wise friend Mr. Smiley, it's likely a bat fly of the Nycteribiidae family, which are small, wingless, flat, spider-like flies that live their lives on bats, tapped into a wing vein.
Wonder if the bat fly ever yells "wooohoo!!!" as they're ripping along?
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References:
- Wikipedia - Townsend's Big-eared Bat
- Wikipedia - Nycteribiidae
- Nature of a Man (this blog) - The Attraction of Roadsides
- Nature of a Man (this blog) - Return to the Bat Cave
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